Yorkshire Post

Drug trial hope over Alzheimer’s

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

A long-awaited drug treatment which can halt Alzheimer’s disease may be on the horizon after promising results from an early stage clinical trial, according to experts.

A LONG-AWAITED drug treatment which can halt Alzheimer’s disease may be on the horizon after promising results from an early stage clinical trial.

Experts are taking care not to build up false hopes about the antibody drug, aducanumab, which clears away sticky protein fragments in the brain linked to Alzheimer’s.

But according to one leading charity, the first disease-modifying therapy for the devastatin­g brain condition may now be within sight.

Dr David Reynolds, chief scientific officer at Alzheimer’s Research UK, said: “These results provide tantalisin­g evidence that a new class of drug to treat the disease may be on the horizon.

“The findings suggest that aducanumab may slow memory and thinking decline in people with early Alzheimer’s and, although the analysis is only explorator­y in this early trial, it paints a positive picture for ongoing trials with the drug.”

The last Alzheimer’s drug licensed in the UK became available more than a decade ago. Current treatments can reduce symptoms to some extent but doctors have nothing that can halt or slow progressio­n of the disease. An estimated 850,000 people in the UK suffer from some form of dementia, most having Alzheimer’s.

By 2025 their numbers are expected to swell to more than a million.

Alzheimer’s is linked to the build up of sticky clumps of betaamyloi­d peptide – pieces of protein – in the brain.

Scientists have long known that removing beta-amyloid could lead to halting or at least slowing Alzheimer’s progressio­n. But until now all attempts to target the peptide with a drug have met with failure.

Aducanumab is a monoclonal antibody – an immune system agent copied and produced in a laboratory which selectivel­y targets beta-amyloid.

Tests on mice geneticall­y engineered to develop a disease similar to Alzheimer’s showed that the drug could enter the brain and reduce levels of betaamyloi­d in a dose-dependent fashion.

Scientists also conducted an early trial to evaluate the safety and tolerabili­ty of monthly aducanumab injections in patients displaying early symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease.

A total of 165 patients received monthly infusions of either aducanumab or a placebo “dummy drug” for one year.

After 54 weeks of treatment, scans showed that levels of betaamyloi­d had been significan­tly reduced in the brains of patients given the antibody.

Higher doses were associated with greater reduction, the researcher­s reported in the journal Nature.

Dr James Pickett, head of research at the charity, said: “No existing treatments for Alzheimer’s directly interfere with the disease process, and so a drug that actually slows the progress of the disease by clearing amyloid would be a significan­t step.

“While there were hints that it might have an effect on the symptoms of the disease, we need to see the results from further, larger research trials to understand whether this is the case. These larger trials are now under way, including in the UK, and due to finish in 2020.”

Neuroscien­tist Professor John Hardy, from University College London, warned: “These new data are tantalisin­g, but they are not yet definitive.”

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